First patient treated in the Phase III ECHO-301 study

23 June 2016 • Author: Victoria White, Digital Content Producer

The first patient has been treated in the ECHO-301 study – a Phase III trial evaluating Incyte’s IDO1 inhibitor, epacadostat, with Merck’s Keytruda (pembrolizumab) as first-line treatment for patients with advanced or metastatic melanoma.

Initial data expected in 2018

ECHO-301 is a Phase III randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study that will evaluate pembrolizumab in combination with epacadostat or placebo in patients with unresectable or metastatic melanoma. The study will enrol 600 patients, randomised 1:1, who will be stratified by PD-L1 expression (positive versus negative/indeterminate) and BRAF mutation status (BRAF mutant who have received prior BRAF-directed treatment or BRAF mutant with no prior BRAF-directed treatment and BRAF wild type).

The two primary endpoints of the study are progression-free survival and overall survival. Key secondary endpoints include objective response rate, safety and tolerability.

“We are very pleased to treat the first patient in the ECHO-301 study and advance the Phase III programme evaluating epacadostat in combination with pembrolizumab,” said Steven Stein, M.D. Incyte’s Chief Medical Officer. “This trial – the first to test this combination in a pivotal study – is part of the larger ECHO programme evaluating epacadostat, including combination studies with anti-PD-1 and PD-L1 therapies across multiple tumour types.”

Incyte expects initial data from the ECHO-301 study to be available in 2018.